Elevation, Winter 2015

Page 1

Reflections

WINTER

2015

in this issue + In-Between History: A Rebel, a Remnant and a Revolutionary (PAGE 1) + VIEWS: A Flock of Landscape Architects (PAGE 7) + Tree Preservation – Protecting Legacy Trees and Design Integrity (PAGE 9) + Perspectives in ILASLA Registration History (PAGE 10) + Looking Back (PAGE 14)

elevation A QUARTERLY PUBLICATION OF THE ILLINOIS CHAPTER American Society of Landscape Architects www.il-asla.org

In-Between History: A Rebel, a Remnant and a Revolutionary By Kris Lucius // SmithGroupJJR

T

he Illinois landscape holds an important place in the history of the American imagination—the inland sea, the gateway to the west, the phoenix risen from ashes, the white city. From the 19th century to today, major names have shaped the cities, communities, and the design minds of Illinois, and have been critical in advancing the theory and practice of landscape architecture at large. No history of environmental design would be complete without these projects, designers, and thinkers in its index, but neither would it be complete with just these names. For the curious, these forgotten histories provide a rich understanding of the past, one with greater resolution, hue, and context. Though they fall outside the main stream of

our historical narrative, they aren’t terribly difficult to find; they are the footnotes, in small letters, and one needs only to squint to bring them into focus. It is a matter of going beyond the “guidebook standards,” the highest artistic achievement must-sees, to find the secondary: forgoing the Eiffel Tower for

FOR THE CURIOUS, THESE FORGOTTEN HISTORIES PROVIDE A RICH UNDERSTANDING OF THE PAST, ONE WITH GREATER RESOLUTION, HUE, AND CONTEXT. the stairs of Rue Foyatier or bypassing the oil masterwork to stumble upon a sublime charcoal sketch. There is no denying the greatness and importance of the first, but chance encounters with the second allow a sense of discovery, of viewing and experiencing a work as something purely new, uncolored by the analysis of others.

Wabash Plaza See Looking Back article, Page 14

As a relatively new Chicagoan, I’ve not yet come to a level of local familiarity where I can take the big names for granted. The Illinois landscape is still novel and largely foreign to me, and my list of unvisited works by Jensen, Caldwell, and Wright is long. Nevertheless I’ve come across some curious outliers, cultural also-rans and anomalies that have not made history’s final draft but merit a closer look.

Rebel: Ralph Rodney Root In 1912, after training at Cornell University and Harvard University and at just 28 years old, Ralph Rodney Root guided the transformation of the landscape gardening curriculum at UIUC into the Landscape Architecture Division. At the same time, he endeavored to create the definitive primer on landscape architecture, a reasoned and thorough examination of the principles of design and a reaction to preceding texts which he found lacking. His 1914 book, coauthored by an art professor, Design in Landscape Gardening, balances scientific reasoning [continued on page 4]


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Elevation, Winter 2015 by American Society of Landscape Architects, Illinois Chapter - Issuu